5, one through each vertex, bi-secting the opposite side.
A regular pentagon has five axes of symmetry. Each axis passes through one vertex and the midpoint of the opposite side. In contrast, an irregular pentagon may have fewer axes of symmetry, depending on its specific shape.
a pentagon has 10 lines of symmetry
A general pentagon may have no symmetries at all. A regular pentagon has five symmetry axes - each one connecting a vertex with the middle of the edge opposite this vertex. A regular pentagon also has rotational symmetry - if you rotate it by any multiple of 72 degrees clockwise or anti-clockwise you get a regular pentagon as well. Please also see the related link below.
In general, a square. A square always has 4 lines of symmetry. A pentagon need not have any. Only a regular pentagon can have 5 lines of symmetry. But if you created pentagons from sides with random lengths then, assuming the pentagons existed, only a tiny fraction would be regular: most pentagons would have no axes of symmetry.
It has 1 line of symmetry
A regular pentagon has five axes of symmetry.
It has 5 axes of symmetry
5
5
i think 5
A regular pentagon has five axes of symmetry. Each axis passes through one vertex and the midpoint of the opposite side. In contrast, an irregular pentagon may have fewer axes of symmetry, depending on its specific shape.
Infinitely many: any line can be an axis. A regular pentagon has six axes of symmetry.
yes
it has six three on one side three on the other* * * * * No it does not.An ordinary pentagon has none. It can have 1 or, if it is a regular pentagon, 5.
I think it has 4 * * * * * Sorry, but you thought wrong. The correct answer is 5.
There are infinitely many axes of symmetry in mathematics.
a rectangle has 2 axes of symmetry